There are different ways of elaborating the cognitive scientific process. In the most ordinary way, information grows in the framework of a single stable scientific paradigm. Sometimes, new data conflict with old paradigms and a search of the way out of the epistemological impasse ultimately leads to change.It seems to us that this latter process occurred in the study of the Neolithisation process in the north-east of the Sea of Azov region. The evidence from multilayer Early Neolithic settlements such as Rakushechnyi Yar, Matveev Kurgan I and II, and Razdorskaya 2 (Fig. 1), which was published separately many times in scientific literature (Krizhevskaya 1991;Belanovskaya 1995;Wechler 2001; Tsybrij 2008; Aleksandrovsky et al. 2009) already does not correspond with many parameters with the old prevailing schema of the development of the Early-Middle Holocene cultures of the southern part of East Europe (Danilenko 1969;Belanovskaya, Telegin 1996;Kotova 2003). This had many causes.First of all, according to recent evidence (Aleksandrovsky et al. 2009.89-98; Tsybrij et al. 2013.272-
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